Charter May Acquire Bright House

The cable business is predicated on franchises awarded by municipalities, which leads operators to focus their holdings regionally. It’s a new world, of course, but those geographic footprints remain.

It comes as no surprise, then, that Charter is buying Bright House Networks – but only if Comcast finishes off its deal for Time Warner Cable. The idea is that the second deal only makes sense from a clustering point of view if the first one closes.

Should the Comcast-TWC deal go through, Charter and Comcast will end up swapping some systems, an arrangement that will transfer control of several million Comcast subscribers to Charter and Charter-controlled Greatland Connections (which similarly will come into existence only if the Comcast merger is approved). Charter said BHN’s networks will be largely contiguous with its own after the system swaps with Comcast.

This is not the first time this type of situation has arisen in the cable market, so more dominos may follow.

Wi-Fi Makes Shoppers Happy

People love the Internet and, for that reason, it is being shown a lot of love by retailers. A study conducted by IHL Group on behalf of EarthLink Holdings indicates that companies of all sizes reap rewards if they upgrade their Wi-Fi infrastructure. The survey, which used input from more than 100 businesses of various sizes, found that 28 percent of retailers reported an increase of 2 percent after deploying Wi-Fi and that almost half enjoyed an increase of 3.4 percent when it was offered to employees.

It’s interesting that the impact is even more pronounced when the employees – rather than shoppers – get access:

The survey results suggest that employee WiFi is a bigger positive driver of sales than customer WiFi, indicating the importance of a creating a connected, flexible workforce that is untethered from point-of-sale stations.

Cota uses the device’s existing antenna for charging. This is a big deal because it eliminates the need for internal coils that are required by devices currently on the market. It seems as if the company has thought of all the angles:

The Cota receiver chip also includes power management capabilities that manufacturers can leverage to reduce component costs, required circuit board area, and time-to-market, making the industry's most robust wireless power technology also the easiest to integrate.

Sirius XM said that it will introduce a platform with 2016 Nissans. The first model covered will be the Maxima. Services will include vehicle security, vehicle health monitoring, remote access services and other services. The site said that AT&T is teaming with Autonet Mobile for 4G services such as door management, Wi-Fi, parental controls, software updates, and the ability to check vehicle diagnostics via cellphones.

Meet You at Starbucks

And, finally, comes a story about something that makes a lot of sense when you think about it. Concur, which eWeek says calls itself “the world’s largest provider of cloud-based travel and expense management services,” found that the top business meal and meeting locale is Starbucks. The story says that the fact that Starbucks is everywhere—with 21,366 locales worldwide—is a big reason it holds the title.

Concur added that there is a tremendous amount of daily repeat business. This suggests that people on the road are often holding back-to-back meetings at the coffee shops.

Carl Weinschenk covers telecom for IT Business Edge. He writes about wireless technology, disaster recovery/business continuity, cellular services, the Internet of Things, machine-to-machine communications and other emerging technologies and platforms. He also covers net neutrality and related regulatory issues. Weinschenk has written about the phone companies, cable operators and related companies for decades and is senior editor of Broadband Technology Report. He can be reached at cweinsch@optonline.net and via twitter at @DailyMusicBrk.